Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 29 Dec 1972, p. 4

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uncoi*. ONE WONDERFUL SHOW! FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF MCHENRY 3814 WEST ELM, MCHENRY. ILLINOIS SOOSO 815-385-5400 SPORTS EDITORj By Dick Rabbitt irlV*?s LICENSE PLATES COME IN AND PICK YOURS UP... ANOTHER OF THIS BANK'S SERVICES FOR YOU EFFECTIVE DECEMBER 1,1972 I SERVICE FEE $1.00 EARL WALSH So I Hear MEET YOUR COACHES PAGE 4-PLAINDEALER-FRIDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1972 WANT A WANTS A BASKET and he gets it as he lays one in for the Warriors. Roger Wanta 44 scored 4 points in the McHenry victory. Other Warrior in photo is Mark Bentz who led the Warriors with 25 points. The McHenry Warriors are now in Kankakee for a Varsity Tournament. Their next conference game is Jan. 12 at Zion- Benton. (STAFF PHOTO-WAYNE GAYLORD) NEW YEAR RESOLUTIONS To remember to forget un-, pleasant incidents. Not to make a mountain out of a molehill. To reduce. ( That one is automatic every year). Not to let our hair grow long. (That one should be easy). Not to pick on those Cub fans any more than in the past. (Just as much, but not any more). To order our World Series tickets early. To smoke less. (Air pollution, you know). To sleep rifore hours in bed and less in our easy chair. Not to try to eat the whole thing. Not to tell the same stories to the same people too often. To try a little harder in doing today what we shouldn't put off 'til tomorrow. Not to run out of gas. (In the car, we mean). Not to try to answer "The Kindly Dentist" when he asks a question while our mouth is stuffed with gadgets. To get rid of at least one chin. Not to watch those darn Late Shows. To walk. (Not too far. But, a little farther than from our chair to the dining room table). To catch up on our mechanical work around the house. (We did screw in a light bulb the other night). To remember to turn down our hearing aid when we go into Bimbo's. (When they have the TV and juke box on at the same time, you might as well try to carry on a visit in a boiler factory). With all that foolishness out of the way, we sincerely wish each of you all the happiness that iife allows in the coming NEW YEAR. C D. of A. 7 p.m. Isy Thompson 431; Ronnie Romkowske 430; Lois Crouch 482; Jo Rizzo 443; Sue Smith 425; Linda Roepenack 504 (Wowie)-(Buddy Bomar--93 pin over ave); Nell Fidler 437; Shirley Kinley 432; Bette O'Brien 465; John Henry-Alias Clarice Buenzli 461; Maxine Adams 457; Fran Zank 497 -89 pins over ave. (Beautiful). Hey Koleno -- no score tonite!! What's with the new ball -- Soak it in the bath tub -- Better yet -- in the Fox River Ha Ha Ha Ha. BILL HUTCHINSON Bill Hutchinson is the Cross Country coach and Freshmen Wrestling coach. Bill and his wife, JoAnn have three children. Tom, 15, Jerry, 12, and Sue, 10. Bill attended Schurz high school in Chicago where he was an All City halfback. Hutch attended the University of Wisconsin where he lettered in football for 3 years. He played on the Big Ten champs of 1952 and played in the Rose Bowl on Jan. 1, 1953. In his senior year he led the Big 10 in punt returns. He also has a Master's Degree from Nor­ thern Illinois university. Prior to this year Bill was head wrestling coach for 14 years. His team was North Suburban Conference champs in 1962, and won the district in 1962 and 1968. He was also Ass't Varsity football coach for 4 years, and Freshmen coach for 2 years. The past three years he has been the Cross Country coach where his teams have been one of the best in Northern Illinois. I Coast Guard l I New? j WH-O-OPS and Bensen of the Tigers loses the ball as Warrior Randy Mauch puts on the pressure in the Warrior 73-54 win over Crystal Lake. It appears that Mauch is committing a foul, but the Ref missed it. (STAFF PHOTO-WAYNE GAYLORD) 10 Hew Tgeei /\ze A/ie/v\e€7?j OtTHe RP$E FAMily/f/ Dual Citizenship Youngsters on Point Roberts frequently have dual citizenship. Although part of the State of Washington, Port Roberts is cut off from the mainland by water, and its women usually give birth to their babies at a hospital in Vancouver. When the children reach 21, they can choose to be citizens of either the United States or Canada. uhe lAJowiy, Cli inic The Coast Guard boating information center in Fox Lake, Illinois has the latest information concerning boating courses being taught in the Chicagoland area by the Coast Guard auxiliary. This is a great opportunity to learn the latest boating laws and to share ideas about boating with many other people that are interested in this pleasurable sport. In addition, the center has information concerning home study courses that are available for those who cannot get together in a class with their fellow boaters. Please call 587-6135 for this and other boating information. All young wives should be in­ terested in Delia's anxiety. But Delia's grandmother is not correct. Prior to its birth, the unborn baby is influenced by its mother's chemistry rather than her psychology. But drugs and cigarettes are causing thousands of defective babies every year! So send for the "Pregnancy" booklet below. By-George W.Crane, Ph. D., M.D. CASE L-563: Delia S., aged 24, is afraid. "Dr. Crane," she began, "we have been married for 2 years and now I find we are going to have a baby. "But I have developed an abnormal craving for water­ melon, even though they are out of season. "And my grandmother positively tell I shall mark my baby if I don't get plenty of watermelons to eat. "She says the baby may have a birthmark shaped like a watermelon and red, like the meat of a ripe melon. "So I am all upset. Is it possible for an expectant mother to mark her baby because of her peculiar hungers or fears?" PREGNANCY FACTS Suppose Delia had borne a perfectly formed infant and were nursing it at her breast. Do you readers think any peculiar hunger, such as her present desire for water­ melons, would produce a red birthmark on its fact? Yet even before its birth, an expectant mother is merely the food supply and shelter for her unborn baby. Remember, it is an entirely separate personality, with its own heart and its own blood vessels. The mother's blood doesn't get across into the baby's circulation, nor vice versa. And there is no anatomical connection between the unborn baby and its mother except by the umbilical cord. Yet that umbilical cord contains NO NERVES WHATSOEVER! Its mother's fears or anxieties, as well as even her noble thoughts, thus have no way of crossing over into the baby's brain! Prior to its birth, she in­ fluences it on a chemical basis. Thus, if she is malnourished herself or uses LSD or smokes cigarettes, she may deprive it of vital food values or injure its developing body and brain via those harmful chemicals. For example, babies born to mothers who smoke during pregnancy are thus smaller, lighter in weight and more likely to have birth defects! Also, far more of such pregnancies terminate by miscarriages! But a mother's peculiar food desires (called pica) or her fears, do not produce red birth­ marks on its skin, as Delia's grandmother erroneously believes. An unborn baby, however, receives liquid food elements that seep across from its mother's blood into its own separate blood system, much as a plant's rootlets derive water and food from soil. An if the mother has had various contagious diseases and thus has immune bodies in her blood stream, they can slip across into the baby's cir­ culation. Also, if the mother has a germ diease like syphilis or a virus ailment, such as measles, these germs and viruses are so tiny that they can likewise seep across into the baby's blood vessels. Thus, a newborn infant may develop measles prior to birth. And it can be infected with syphilis from its mother if she has an active case. But, remember, it doesn't inherit these germ diseases! It merely catches them prior to birth, as it might also contract them after its birth while nursing at her breast. Music and noble thoughts will inspire the expectant mother during pregnancy but her actual psychological tutoring of the child begins AFTER its birth. So send for my medical booklet "Facts About Pregnancy", enclosing a long stamped, return envelope, plus 20 cents. Baptize Baby Christmas Day Mrs. Marie Vales, son, Albert, and Mr. and Mrs. James Glosson and children, James, Jr., David and Shawn, of McHenry and Frank Kempfer, Sr., of Ringwood spent Christmas day in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Kempfer, Jr., at Genoa, 111. While there they witnessed the baptism of the junior Kempfers' first grandchild, Michael Anthony Lawinger, who was christened by Father James McKitrick in St. Catherine's Catholic church, Genoa. The baby is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Mark Lawinger of Genoa. Mrs. Lawinger is the former Debbie Kempfer. Great-grandparents of the infant are Mrs. Marie Vales and Frank Kempfer, Sr. MCHENRY HOSPITAL Patients in McHenry hospital this week included Katherine Noe, Virginia Posthuma, Adeline Chaps, Charles Claypool, Gregory Sisk, Charles Olhlerking, James Adams, Jr., Lillian Szc- zanowicz, William P. Nicholas, Scott Cedergren, Henry Dierken, Brian Halbrendt, Doretta Becker, Jeffrey Smith and William Glennon of McHenry; Alice Mackin, Mary Lascola and Otto Menolasino of Wonder Lake. MEMORIAL HOSPITAL WOODSTOCK Admitted to Memorial hospital, Woodstock, this week were Ferol Tomlinson, Walter Sims, Howard Lock wood, Leila Buhrman, Suzanne Gerasch, Norma Simon, Baby Russell May and Master Sean Dar- mody of McHenry; Leo Knapp, Jerry Kuchta, George Meyer, William Ruggero, Peggy Sterba, James Maggio, Bernice Jerls and Master John Raber of Wonder Lake. IMPROVES Earl "Marty" Conway is improving nicely in St. Francis hospital, Evanston, where he underwent surgery recently. He is in Room 545. Brought To You By John Jepsen Here's one of the most J fascinating football stories | of all time Perhaps you I know it, perhaps you . don't Back in 1942,Bos- • ton College was the num- I ber one team in the coun- | try...They were undefeated • going into the last game J with Holy Cross...They I were heavily favored, and | made reservations to hold • a victory celebration after ! the game at a place called I the Coconut Grove....How- | ever, in one of the great- • est upsets in football his- ! tory, Holy Cross not only I beat Boston, but they beat I them by the unbelievable | score of 52-12....The • crushed Boston College of- I ficials naturally cancelled I the "Victory" party.... | Then, that night the Co- | coriut Grove burned in one ! of the worst disasters in I history with 492people los- | ing their lives....The Bos- • ton College football players • all might have been killed • except for the fact that they | lost a football game that | afternoon Fate plays • strange tricks, doesn't it? j * * * * * Did you know that in the • old days of football, the • coaches didn't want their | players to wear numbers | on their uniforms....They • thought it would be better • if everybody -- opponents I and fans -- were confused | about who was carrying | the ball^..... Most teams ! didn't stafrt wearing num- I bers until the 1920s, and | then they were very small | and usually worn on the . back only .... The rule • requiring teams to wear | big numbers on both the • back and front of their ! jersies was not passed un- • til 1937. | * * * * * I bet you didn't know a that Jepsen Tire Co. has ! something new and great I for your car. It's the new | Cooper 60 series XXT • Tire, made with 2 poly- . ester cord body plies for • a smooth ride and 2 fi- | berglass cord belts under I the tread to hold the tread • form and fight the "wig- J gles". See Jepsen Tire Co. I for the Cooper 60, XXT | in raised white letters. JEPSEN I I PANV | j 3331, 3314 West Elm St. I Phone 385-0424 I OVERSIZE ... "The style is fine but could I see a size smal­ ler?" Little Buckshot, a 10- week old beagle at the Mus­ kingum County Ohio Animal Shelter, had a hare raising ex­ perience trying on a pair of size 13 hunting boots. MCHS Soph Wrestlers Take Second Place In Wauconda Tournament By Dick Rabbitt Wauconda Soph, wrestling tournament held Dec. 16: McHenry placed second out of 8 teams with 54 pts, Glen- brook South 1st with 68M>. Individual champions: 98 -- Ken Scanlin; 167 - Bob Eppel; HWT - Joe Dougherty. 2nd place: 105 -- Mike Moneale. 138-B. Antonou decisioned Reed. Libertyville, 2-0. 167--B. Eppel defeated Hewitl, Grayslake, on referee's dec. HWT-J. Dougherty pinned Brown of Libertyville. The team did a great job Saturday bounding back from a defeat Friday nite to Liber­ tyville. The sophomores next match is a Triple Dual meet Jan. 6, Wheeling. Sophomores are currently 4-3 in dual meet competition. Individually, Bob Eppel is undefeated in 9 matches, as is Joe Dougherty 7-0. Mark Sullivan at 112 is 6-2. Brian Antonou at 13R is 7-2-1 Don't let your cele­ bration of New Years interfere with your good judgment. If you plan to drink-it is best not to drive. We want to be able to wish you A VERY HAPPY NEW YEAR! ST0FFEL and REIHANSPERGER INSURANCE AGENCY HERB REIHANSPERGER BOB MORTELL 3438 W. ELM 385-0300 McHENRY, ILL. 3rd place: 138 -- Brian An­ tonou. 4th place: 119 - Jim Murgatroyd. 1st round action saw 6 wrestlers winning: 98--K. Scanlin dec. Masciola, Lake Park 4-0; 105--M. Moneale dec. Lample, Deerfield 6j2; 119-J. Murgatroyd dec. Wand, Grayslake 4-1; 132--B. Antonou dec. Lavick, Libertyville 3-0; 167-B. Eppel dec. Holbrook, Lake Forest 6-1; HWT-J. Dougherty bye. 2nd round action: 98--K. Scanlin defeated Wold, Glen- brook South on referee's decision. 105-M. Moneale defeated Swanson, Libertyville on referee's decision. 119-J. Murgatroyd lost to Cokinis, Libertyville 5-4. 138--B. Antonou lost to Meshes, Deerfield 3-0. 167-B. Eppel decisioned Haas, Libertyville. HWT-J. Dougherty pinned Barry, Lake Park. 3rd and final round action: 98~Ken Scanlin decisioned Powell, Libertyville, in over­ time 12-6. 105-Mike Moneale lost to Flems, Glenbrook South, 2-0. 119-J. Murgatroyd lost to Sletsner, Lake Forest, 5-2. " Too much New Year's! " TOWNE FRI.-SAT.-SUN. & MON. DEC. 29, 30, 31 JAN. 1 ADMISSION ONLY $1.00 Included on the Varsity Roster at Huron College is a McHenry native, Jim Heard, a 1970 graduate of McHenry Com­ munity high school. The 6'7" junior letterman plays center. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Jaines Heard. * Fox Lake 587-2612 TUE.-WED.-THURS. JANUARY 2, 3, 4 ADULT ENTERTAINMENT "Smorgasboard" and "Mini Skirt Love" 18 & OVER FOR ADMITTANCE ADMISSION $2.50 WALT DISNEY'S AND I TECHNtCOLOR* PANAVIS40N WALT DISNEY'S All CARTOON FtATUM MUMVUUIS fGl«» TECHNICOLOR® FRI.-SAT.-SUN; & MON. 7:00 SAT.-SUN. MATINEE 1:30 Your money won't do much good when you're dead. Put it to work now. * * * * Santa Claus reports that he is getting urgent mes­ sages every day now. * * * * I T IMMaUUiifl STARTS |> C P FRIDAY l/LUi 29 FRI.-SAT.-SUN. 7:00& 9:00 MON.-THURS. 7:30 ONLY GEORGE C. SCOTT STACY KEACH „ A ROBERT CHARTOFF-IRWIN WINKLER PRODUCTION THE MEW CEMTOMOMB SAT. & SUN. MAT. - ALBERT FINNO START 1:30-QUT 3:25 ADM. $1.00 ^SCROOGE" >

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